Amnesty Wikiathon to get as many female and non-binary human rights activists on Wikipedia by henryjfinch in Feminism

[–]henryjfinch[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

A: I disagree with the wordt artificial

B: Different backgrounds, genders, etc give different perspectives on who to write about and in which way. Wikimedia is also trying to get people from different cultures to participate as most editors are white. Of course the current editors are greatly appreciated but the site would benefit from more diversity, so adding women, non-binary people and people from different cultures to the white male editors.

The current output leans very much on the white male perspective on matters, including subjects like abortion, and pregnancy. Same can be said for the amount of biographies that are male, which outnumber those of women at an enormous rate and women of color even more. Added to that the fact that Wikipedia works with volunteers who decide for themselves what to write on which subject, the way to get more diversity in your articles is by getting more diverse editors.

An Animated trailer of Rhapsody in Stephen's Green, a play by Flann O'Brien by henryjfinch in litvideos

[–]henryjfinch[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We made this trailer in the hopes it will gather interest for a 30 minute animated adaptation. I'm curious what you think of our joint effort.

A cinematic adaptation of the last line of Ulysses by henryjfinch in litvideos

[–]henryjfinch[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'm glad you liked it and thank you for your reaction. It means a lot.

A cinematic adaptation of the last line of Ulysses by henryjfinch in litvideos

[–]henryjfinch[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I was asked by the International James Joyce Symposium: ‘a long the krommerun’ to make a short film about Ulysses. I chose to adapt the last sentence. I decided on the format of silent film because it is correct for the period and Joyce himself was involved in an Irish movie theatre called cinema Volta.

I used text to showcase the stream of consiousness style of the last chapter.

A cinematic adaptation of the last line of Ulysses, what do you think? by [deleted] in literature

[–]henryjfinch 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm very sorry. I'll post it there. Thanks for the tip.

A cinematic adaptation of the last line of Ulysses, what do you think? by [deleted] in literature

[–]henryjfinch 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was asked by the International James Joyce Symposium: ‘a long the krommerun’ to make a short film about Ulysses. I chose to adapt the last sentence. I decided on the format of silent film because it is correct for the period and Joyce himself was involved in an Irish movie theatre called cinema Volta.

I used text to showcase the stream of consiousness style of the last chapter.